The Great Offensive Explosion of 2018 has the potential to revolutionize the way we think about offense and quarterback play for years to come.

What’s become clear week after week, as records for points, touchdowns and quarterback efficiency are set, is that the old-school metrics we’ve long used to evaluate quarterbacks are becoming largely meaningless. Passer rating, the complicated formula created in 1973 that gives quarterbacks a score on a scale of 0 to 158.3? Passing yards? Those stats are so 1998.

Consider: There is only one quarterback in NFL history, Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers, with a career passer rating over 100. Through Week 11 of this season, there were 11 quarterbacks (with at least 100 passing attempts) with a rating over 100. In Week 10’s games alone, 18 starting quarterbacks broke that 100 threshold that for so long was considered the gold standard of quarterbacking.